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Shared Decision-Making for the Promotion of Patient-Centered Imaging in the ED: Suspected Kidney Stones (ED-KSS)

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Baystate Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Emergencies
Kidney Stone
Communication
Radiation Exposure
Shared Decision-making

Treatments

Behavioral: Decision Aid
Other: Standardized Educational Material (informational pamphlet)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT04234035
BH-19-168

Details and patient eligibility

About

Although a CT scan is required for some Emergency Department patients with signs and symptoms of a kidney stone, recent evidence has shown that routine scanning is unnecessary and may expose young patients to significant cumulative radiation, increasing their risk of future cancers. Shared Decision-Making may facilitate diagnostic imaging decisions that are more inline with patients' values and preferences. By comparing a shared approach to diagnostic decision-making to a traditional, physician-directed approach, this study lays the foundation for a future randomized trial that will reduce radiation exposure, improve engagement, and improve the quality and patient-centeredness of Emergency Department care.

Enrollment

98 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 55 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18-55,
  2. with acute flank pain - for whom clinician believes acute flank pain may be from renal colic
  3. who are deemed by the treating clinician to be at low risk for dangerous alternative diagnoses.
  4. Clinician is considering imaging patient for kidney stones (any imaging)

Exclusion criteria

  1. Recent trauma related to pain (including minor such as lifting/turning)
  2. Pregnancy (previous or discovered during ED visit)
  3. Recent surgical procedure on abdomen or pelvis (30d)
  4. Recent urologic procedure (30d)
  5. Recent childbirth (30d)
  6. Signs of Systemic Infection: Fever >100.9 (101 and up), SBP <90, HR>120
  7. Moderate or severe abdominal tenderness or rebound/guarding, consistently present (present for more than one exam, or present after patient treated with pain medication)
  8. Second doctor's visit (ED, PCP, urgent care) for THIS episode of pain (previous similar visits ok if pain gone for >30d in between episodes) (if seen at PCP or urgent care in same day or 24 hour period, this is not an exclusion, but if seen at PCP/urgent care or ED 1-30 days prior to index visit, with same pain, excluded)
  9. Known history of one kidney or other urological/renal abnormality (including neurogenic bladder, ESRD and paraplegia; or if solitary kidney discovered on US)
  10. Known malignancy (any) within past year (or received treatment in the past 12 months)
  11. Immunocompromised (chronic steroids, HIV, crohns, immunomodulators or severely ill chronically)
  12. On anticoagulation
  13. Crisis patient (behavioral health)/belligerent
  14. Lacks capacity for medical decision-making
  15. Unlikely to respond to follow-up calls (IVDA, homeless, no phone)
  16. Clinician is concerned for alternative diagnosis requiring CT scan (appendicitis) (>5% likelihood by clinician gestalt)
  17. Patient is not improving clinically and clinician is considering admission

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

98 participants in 2 patient groups

Shared Decision-Making (via Decision Aid)
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention is a decision aid, which both encourages and facilitates a shared decision-making conversation between the clinician and the patient. The decision aid educates patients regarding evidence-based approaches to the management of suspected kidney stones in the ED. Clinicians will receive training specific to this decision aid, though the decision aid is designed to be used with no additional training.
Treatment:
Other: Standardized Educational Material (informational pamphlet)
Behavioral: Decision Aid
standardized educational intervention (pamphlet +usual care)
Active Comparator group
Description:
The control arm will receive Usual Care and a standardized educational intervention (pamphlet). This intervention (pamphlet) contains information about kidney stones. Usual care for this clinical scenario generally involves the clinician choosing the management plan. Clinicians of subjects assigned to the usual care group will be asked to practice usual, evidence-based medical care, without shared decision-making.
Treatment:
Other: Standardized Educational Material (informational pamphlet)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Kye Poronsky

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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